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Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
Torremolinos 73 (2003, Pablo
Berger)
If you've been waiting for the heir apparent
to Pedro Almódovar to appear, you can relax.
Pablo Berger's Torremolinos
73 is a sexy, fun, goodhearted little movie like
Almódovar's earliest, though without the
drag queens and S&M.
This little film is a spoof on the straight and
porn film industries and a personal comedy with
dramatic edges. It is set in the ’70s and
feels as though it could've been shot then, too.
Starring Javier Cámara
(Alfredo) and Candela Peña
(Carmen) both also familiar from Almódovar's
films (Cámara appeared in Talk To Her
and Bad Education, and Peña in
All About My Mother), it's the story
of a Spanish encyclopedia salesman offered a better
gig: as a director of homemade soft porn flicks
for the Scandinavian market, starring him and
his wife. While he discovers latent talent for
directing, his wife discovers her latent talent
for “acting.” Meanwhile, her desire
for a child threatens their marriage even more
than being stopped in public with nude stills
to sign. When Alfredo is offered the chance to
direct his Ingmar Bergman-homage “straight”
film, hilarity--and drama--ensue.
Being a film geek would certainly help one enjoy
this picture, not only because the Bergman jokes
and parodies will make more sense, but because
the entire movie on one level is poking fun at
filmmaking. Porn-film cinematographers claim to
have worked for Bergman, and ladies in salons
discuss with relish the "obscenity"
of the classic art film Last Tango in Paris.
Porn is treated as something that liberates this
repressed post-Franco couple as well as sets them
up financially, and Alfredo's desire to make a
serious film is not so much that he's disgusted
with porn as that he's longing to become an artist,
which, of course, makes him ripe for satire. Even
Carmen's first autograph-seeker follows her around
with a Super 8 camera of his own, adding yet another
level to the humor.
Shot in overexposed, grey-toned ’70s-style
film stock against a variety of badly decorated
rooms, the film feels like something caught on
home video, but the script, with sly postmodern
twists, obviously took hard work and thought.
After all, a housewife with baby envy and a husband
with issues about it aren't exactly rare plot
devices, but ’70s housewife/porn star? Admittedly,
the Scandinavian market jokes won't make much
sense to American viewers ignorant of sociopolitical
climates in Spain and Sweden thirty years ago,
but one can still laugh at Carmen being chased
through a department store by a Scandinavian tourist
asking for her autograph in bad Spanish.
Sexually liberated, witty, and still humanist,
this comedy is a very good first film for this
writer-director, with great starring actors and
a good supporting cast as well, and a mostly good-natured
sense of humor. Like Ed Wood directing soft porn,
Alfredo wins your sympathy but is still easy to
laugh at, and the sometimes soap-opera plot has
film-nerd humor and wit to keep it from becoming
too saccharine or melodramatic.
Sarah Jaffe, June 24, 2005
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